AIML Forums

Saturday, April 26, 2008

The 2008 Chatterbox Challenge judges have selected A.L.I.C.E. as the #1 chatter bot in preliminary scoring! Now it is your turn to vote for the best of the bots. The judges have selected the top 20 bots, and the Chatterbox Challenge is open to public voting. Whether you vote for A.L.I.C.E. or not, you will be amazed by the variety and quality of bots competing in this year's contest.Unlike the famous Loebner Prize contest, the Chatterbox Challenge allows entries to be submitted online. So in many cases, you can chat directly with these bots over the web. (The organizers of the Loebner Prize are concerned about cheating.) Also unlike the conventional Turing Test, the Chatterbox Challenge does not directly compare human and bot performance; it is a ranking of the bots on their own merits.If you do choose to vote for A.L.I.C.E., we appreciate your support!

Pandorabots implemented and in order to help botmasters write scripts for their bots to learn new AIML categories from conversations. Steve has discovered that these extensions can also be used to create a dynamic extension to the language, that allows the botmaster to compare two variables.

Suppose the botmaster wants to compare two predicates with the values JOHN and PAUL.The basic "trick" behind Steve's method is to "learn" a new category like

Only the input BOTCHECK JOHN will match the first category, in which case the predicates have the same value. The AIML Steve developed is a little more complicated than that, and you can find out all the details in his post to the mailing list.

Friday, April 18, 2008

The New Scientist Feedback column ran a story about Ron Ingram's Godsbot in the March 22 issue. The article describes the author's interactions with Godsbot, and concludes that it must be based on ELIZA. (Godsbot is, in fact, based on ALICE). The article cites the usual types of good, not-so-good, and humorous bot responses. Despite the obvious limitations, the author is "impressed".

After identifying Ron Ingram as the creator of Godsbot, the authors say "The trail from Godsbot doesn't stop there, either. Feedback has tracked down the source of the AI software, a site called Pandorabots, which lets you design your own software robots and turn them loose on the Internet. When we last checked, the site boasted that Pandorabots had served up 564,580,317 replies. Is it too late to shut the lid?"

Christian Drossmann, creator of the German ALICE bot, has written to say that the German speaking chatbot is back online and hosted at Pandorabots. Christan said he "couldn't resist giving the (Pandorabots) system a try", and he plans to analyze the log files and add more content to the "rather crude" standard categories in German. He said, "I missed the coding."

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About Dr. Richard Wallace

Dr. Richard S. Wallace formed the ALICE A. I. Foundation in 2001 to promote the development and adoption of Artificial Intelligence Markup Language (AIML) and ALICE free software. Dr. Wallace has a Ph.D. in computer science from Carnegie Mellon.